Lori Ryan

Rachel Thompson

Aicha Zoubair

Saturday, December 27, 2014

I
was asked to give you a little insight on me by telling you 10 things
that you might not realize about me from author biographies that you see
in the back of my books.

My first short stories were published while I was in high school. I was a senior in high school when I had short stories accepted for publication in the National Vietnam Veterans Review. I wasn’t paid for them, but I still count them as my first publishing credits.

My first professional publishing writing credit was in 1988. The
first time that I got paid for something I wrote was when I was still
in college. I competed in a competition to develop a marketing and
advertising campaign for a new business. I put together an entire
campaign with ads, press releases, etc. and won the competition. What I
was particularly pleased with was that I was competing against teams of
other college students, and yet, I won by doing it all by myself.

I have won more than two dozen journalism and advertising awards. I
have won awards from the Maryland-Delaware-DC Press Association,
Society of Professional Journalists, Associated Press, Maryland State
Teachers Association, CNHI, Utah Ad Federation and American Advertising
Federation of Greater Frederick. I figure it is only a matter of time
before my books start winning awards. I’ve got my fingers crossed.

My family is not interested in writing. You
would figure that at least someone in my family would also be
interested in writing since it’s my work. They’re not. In fact, only my
youngest son is the only regular reader in the family and my wife admits
the only book of mine that she has read was my first historical novel
published in 2000.

Both of my sons are adopted. My wife and I have two sons. They are both adopted; one from Kentucky and one from Russia.

I love to bicycle. I
can’t say that I’m particularly fast on my bike. I average about 13.5
mph, but I do bike about 100 miles a week. I tend to meander along the
back roads in the county where I live. I love the scenery, but sometimes
the hills kill me. I will even ride my bike if I have to run errands in
Gettysburg.

I own a dinosaur egg. I
have a small collection of interesting fossils, rocks and minerals that
I’ve accumulated over the years. At a festival I attend annually to
sign books, there’s another gentlemen who sells rocks and minerals. I
always check out his items. Last year, he had a fossilized hadrosaur egg
from China. It’s about the size of two softballs. It was a splurge
purchase.

I have had articles published in more than 110 publications. I
like to write and I try to get in a wide variety of publications as
well as getting published multiple times in the ones I like. I do this
rather than focusing on a few magazines because I have had magazines
that I write for go out of business. I have been published in magazines,
newspapers, web sites, newsletters and newspapers that cover a lot of
different markets and subjects. One of the reasons for the variety is
that I usually come up with an idea first and then try to find the
market for it.

I started out as a business major in college. I
did this because my grandfather kept telling me that I needed a major
that I could get a job with. I figured out that when I get falling
asleep in class, though, that I might want to find a major that better
suited me. With my grandfather’s advice in my head and my interest in
writing, I settled on advertising copywriting, which was an enjoyable
major.

I am a big Jimmy Stewart fan. Forget modern actors. My favorite actor is Jimmy Stewart. I’ve enjoyed his movies since I first watched Mr. Smith Goes to Washington while
I was in college. I think I have seen all of his movies and most of his
television roles. I have even listened to his old-time radio series and
guest appearances.

So there you have it. That’s 10 things I bet you didn’t know about me. Does it make me seem geekier? Oh well, it’s me.

The
Civil War split the United States and now it has split the Fitzgerald
Family. Although George Fitzgerald has returned from the war, his sister
Elizabeth Fitzgerald has chosen to remain in Washington to volunteer as
a nurse. The ex-Confederate spy, David Windover, has given up on his
dream of being with Alice Fitzgerald and is trying to move on with his
life in Cumberland, Md. Alice and her sons continue to haul coal along
the 184.5-mile-long C&O Canal.

It
is dangerous work, though, during war time because the canal runs along
the Potomac River and between the North and South. Having had to
endured death and loss already, Alice wonders whether remaining on the
canal is worth the cost. She wants her family reunited and safe, but she
can’t reconcile her feelings between David and her dead husband. Her
adopted son, Tony, has his own questions that he is trying to answer.

He
wants to know who he is and if his birth mother ever loved him. As he
tries to find out more about his birth mother and father, he stumbles
onto a plan by Confederate sympathizers to sabotage the canal and burn
dozens of canal boats. He enlists David’s help to try and disrupt the
plot before it endangers his new family, but first they will have find
out who is behind the plot.